The Kreutzer Sonata and Other Stories


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word, like corruption of the blood, scarlatina, or else--heaven help  
us--diphtheria, and off she went.  
"It was impossible for it to be otherwise. Women in the old days had the  
belief that 'God has given, God has taken away,' that the soul of the  
little angel is going to heaven, and that it is better to die innocent  
than to die in sin. If the women of to-day had something like this  
faith, they could endure more peacefully the sickness of their children.  
But of all that there does not remain even a trace. And yet it is  
necessary to believe in something; consequently they stupidly believe in  
medicine, and not even in medicine, but in the doctor. One believes in  
X, another in Z, and, like all believers, they do not see the idiocy of  
their beliefs. They believe quia absurdum, because, in reality, if they  
did not believe in a stupid way, they would see the vanity of all that  
these brigands prescribe for them. Scarlatina is a contagious disease;  
so, when one lives in a large city, half the family has to move away  
from its residence (we did it twice), and yet every man in the city is a  
centre through which pass innumerable diameters, carrying threads of all  
sorts of contagions. There is no obstacle: the baker, the tailor, the  
coachman, the laundresses.  
"
And I would undertake, for every man who moves on account of contagion,  
to find in his new dwelling-place another contagion similar, if not the  
same.  
"But that is not all. Every one knows rich people who, after a case of  
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